It is hard to believe that it has been twenty years since an f4 tornado ripped through southern Hamden, leaving damages in the millions of dollars. The 1989 tornado was an incredible challenge for the department. The following day, I grabbed my VHS camcorder and documented much of the damage for the Department's training division - and, of course, for posterity. Occasionally, I added commentary while videoing to establish exact locations because many areas were unrecognizable.

Right after the tornado, I edited the raw video and made VHS copies for our department, as well as the Connecticut Commission on Fire Prevention and Control video library. Just recently, using a Mac, I digitally re-edited the original master tape to just under ten minutes, with better transitions and graphics. It is now available for viewing on YouTube. CLICK the picture on the right to view it.

Dave Johnson

Whitneyville Condos - Newhall and Augur (Photo by Ed Doiron, Jr.)

WVIT Channel 30 News coverage - Monday, July 10, 1989

Tornado - July 10, 1989 - CLICK to enlarge pictures

John Corbett donated 60 photos and negatives of the aftermath of the 1989 Hamden tornado to the archives. Some of them are displayed below. He took the photos when he was held over for 72 hours straight with other personnel. John recalled that he and Ray Dobbs were on one of the rescue units the day after the tornado, when he was able to take these photos.

Many thanks to John and also to Ed Doiron, Jr. who donated his photos taken the day after the tornado struck.

Dolores Fortuna's memory of the event is a vivid as anyone's. It was approaching five in the afternoon and she was about to leave the Hamden Sears store, where she worked in the accounting department. Her father was supposed to pick her up, but he was still at the H.A. Leed Company on Leeder Hill Drive.

It was getting very dark as Dolores waited for her dad by the plate glass doors. She says that she remembers that the doors and windows were rattling something awful, and she wanted to get out of there fast. Just like everyone else in Hamden that afternoon, Dolores could not have imagined that an F4 tornado would be ripping up the south end of town at that very moment - and the H.A. Leed building was among its many casualties.

Fortunately, noted Dolores, her father was in that part of the Leed building that withstood the estimated 200 m.p.h. winds, although his car was totaled out in the front parking area. As for Dolores, she probably could not have had any better protection than the Sears building. Five years later, it would take a lot more than high winds to bring that baby down.

Posted 8/18/12

July 1989 - Rear of H.A. Leed Building

Only heavy machinery could bring the Sears building down - CLICK to read about the demise of the Sears building.